Cumulative [adjective]

Definition of Cumulative:

accruing; growing in size or effect

Synonyms of Cumulative:


Opposite/Antonyms of Cumulative:


Sentence/Example of Cumulative:

Also in 2019, Thompson was honored with the John Chancellor Award, awarded each year to a reporter of “courage and integrity” for their cumulative achievements.

We have been calling out these attacks as they happen and pointing to the cumulative record as needed throughout the last three and a half years.

Over 6 million of them were creators, and the cumulative number of podcasts uploaded to the platform hit a new record high of 215 million.

Participants answered questions about their mental health and overall well-being, and indicated whether they had experienced cumulative lifetime adversities, including a serious illness or divorce in the family.

Somewhere in that mountain of data, there should be one or more measures of cumulative training load that beat mileage as a predictor of injury risk.

For kicks, they analyzed mine too, and concluded that I needed to train harder, because I wasn’t building up much cumulative fatigue.

More recently the cumulative system of voting has come into general favor.

Synaptic cells summed and integrated, cancelled and compared and with saucy assurance sent the findings on toward Cumulative.

The cumulative force of events had made him once more profoundly uncertain.

It is an insinuating and insidious ailment and its progress is cumulative.